A bumpy 24 hours for Trump-backed health bill

Posted by freepronline on March 13th, 2017

(Media Release) Republicans in the House of Representatives unveiled their long-awaited draft healthcare bill on Monday night, amid hopes this was the first step on a road to keeping a key election promise

Replacing the Affordable Care Act became a rallying cry among conservatives for years and here was the first attempt by the party to fashion an alternative.

But just 24 hours later and the mood in the party has changed, with the knives out for the American Health Care Act before it has even reached committee.

It is still a “work in progress”, say Republicans who are behind the bill, but what happened within a few hours on Tuesday means that work may be harder than anyone imagined.

19:50 – House Speaker Paul Ryan says “this unified Republican government will deliver relief and peace of mind to the millions of Americans suffering under Obamacare”. Health Secretary Tom Price says he “welcomes action by the House to end this nightmare for the American people”.

First signs of rebellion

19:50 – It emerges that four Republican senators had released a letter to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell . ( free-pr-online.com) before the bill was unveiled, expressing concerns that it would limit future federal funding for Medicaid, which covers people on low incomes.

01:13 (Tuesday) – An influential group of US House Republicans said they had “major concerns” and called it “Republican welfare entitlement”, according to a memo leaked to Bloomberg

Steadying the ship

19:14 – He then cajoles Senator Rand Paul to end the dissent and rally behind the “great” health care bill.

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Will the bill survive? Anthony Zurcher, BBC News, Washington

It seems like passing the recently unveiled Republican Obamacare replacement bill will be about as difficult as making a half-court basketball shot. From a moving car. While blindfolded.

While Republicans know they have to do something on healthcare reform given seven years of promises, when the subject moves to what to do after repeal, party cohesion falls apart. Moderates hate the bill because of its coverage cuts. Conservatives hate the bill because it preserves parts of the existing system. The only real support the bill has is of the tepid variety.

Donald Trump tweeted that the legislation is now open for “review and negotiation”, but the various factions within the Republican congressional caucus will be pulling in opposite directions – and the end results could be a proposal that is left in tatters.